When the young boy walked into the nurse’s office, he clutched his hat like it was part of him.
“It’s warm in here—want to take it off?” Sofia, the school nurse, asked gently.
He shook his head, barely whispering, “No, I need to keep it on.”
Sofia didn’t push, but she couldn’t shake the feeling that something wasn’t right. He flinched at every movement near the hat, tense and guarded.
Later, at lunch, his teacher confided, “He’s worn that hat every day since spring break. Had a meltdown when asked to remove it during gym. We stopped pushing.”
That night, Sofia called his home. A man answered.
“He’s not sick,” he snapped. “He wears the hat because we told him to. It’s a family matter. Don’t call again.”
The next week, the teacher rushed in—panicked.
“He’s having headaches. He staggers. Something’s wrong.”
Back on the exam table, the boy winced, hands on his head. “Dad said I can’t take it off. If anyone finds out, it’s my fault.”
Sofia knelt beside him. “You’ve done nothing wrong. Let me help.”
As she gently lifted the hat, he screamed in pain. The hat had fused to his scalp. What lay beneath made both women freeze—no hair, just burns. Dozens of deep, round, infected cigarette burns.
“My dad said I was bad,” the boy whispered. “My brother gave me the hat so no one would see.”
That night, authorities stepped in. The father was arrested. The boy was taken to the hospital—and, finally, to safety.